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Article location: http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/62/bmw.html December 19, 2007 Tags: Innovation, Management, Design, strategic planning BMW: Driven by Design By Bill Breen The room is called, appropriately enough, the Penthouse. It takes up about 14,000 square meters atop the Forschungs- und Innovationszentrum, better known as the FIZ, BMW's sprawling, glass-and-steel R&D center in Munich, Germany. The Penthouse stands empty, save for a lone car cloaked in silver canvas. Parked on the west side of the room, the car is backed by floor-to-ceiling windows that reveal a great dome of sky filled with roiling thunderheads. Standing next to the car is a 45-year-old native of Wausau, Wisconsin named Chris Bangle. Blond, blue-eyed, and bearded, Bangle is carefully assembled in a gray pin-striped suit, a blue-and-white- striped shirt, and a tie bearing a jazzy geometric pattern. He has a hardwired intensity about him, and his words take on an even greater urgency as he lifts a corner of the canvas and begins to assist in what can only be described as a striptease. Bangle reveals first the wheels of the car, then its flanks, and on up to the hood, all the while acting as a kind of master of ceremonies in overdrive: "We call this 'flame design' . . . the splines hold the tension . . . these are surfaces that move; it's 'ooh, here we go' . . . proportion, surface, and detail all convey emotion, and yet they are all under control . . . control, control, control -- it's the most important thing." But then he stops. It turns out that this is a bit of a strip but more of a tease, for Bangle resists baring the entire car, BMW's 2003 Z4 sports convertible. There will be no full-frontal display of the Z4 before it makes its official debut at the Paris auto show in late September. At the push of a button, the Z4 takes a slow turn on a revolving platform. "This is it!" Bangle exclaims. "An absolutely hyper-modern roadster, full of mega-emotion." Bangle is amped about the Z4 -- as well he should be. He oversaw the team that designed it. As BMW's chief of design, Bangle leads all 250 of the German carmaker's design engineers and artists, color experts, ergonomic specialists, materials scientists, clay modelers, and computer wizards, all of whom work in the FIZ and in the company's Designworks/USA subsidiary, located in southern California. Ultimately, he is the point man for the look and feel of every car and motorcycle that bears BMW's distinctive blue-and-white roundel, as well as the Mini brand and, as of next year, the ultra-luxury Rolls-Royce. Every model launch at every car company represents a big bet, and the Z4 is no exception: It took a minimum of $1 billion to design and engineer the coupe and ready it for production. But there's far more at stake here than return on investment. The Z4 is BMW's radical follow-up to the January launch of its redesigned flagship, the 7 Series luxury sedan, which is arguably the most controversial model that the German carmaker has ever put before the public. Taken together, the Z4 and the 7 are at the forefront of a make-or-break attempt by BMW to reinvent its entire spectrum of cars. Such a gamble arrives at a perilous moment in Bayerische Motoren Werke AG's 86-year history: The company is coming off of a record- breaking year. And as anyone in the car business will tell you, nothing is tougher than surpassing past success. BMW: Driven by Design http://www.fastcompany.com/node/45352/print 1 of 6 10/6/2011 1:22 PM

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  • Article location:http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/62/bmw.html

    December 19, 2007Tags: Innovation, Management, Design, strategic planning

    BMW: Driven by Design

    By Bill Breen

    The room is called, appropriately enough, the Penthouse. It takes up about 14,000 square meters atop the

    Forschungs- und Innovationszentrum, better known as the FIZ, BMW's sprawling, glass-and-steel R&Dcenter in Munich, Germany. The Penthouse stands empty, save for a lone car cloaked in silver canvas.

    Parked on the west side of the room, the car is backed by floor-to-ceiling windows that reveal a great dome

    of sky filled with roiling thunderheads. Standing next to the car is a 45-year-old native of Wausau,Wisconsin named Chris Bangle.

    Blond, blue-eyed, and bearded, Bangle is carefully assembled in a gray pin-striped suit, a blue-and-white-

    striped shirt, and a tie bearing a jazzy geometric pattern. He has a hardwired intensity about him, and hiswords take on an even greater urgency as he lifts a corner of the canvas and begins to assist in what can

    only be described as a striptease.

    Bangle reveals first the wheels of the car, then its flanks, and on up to the hood, all the while acting as akind of master of ceremonies in overdrive: "We call this 'flame design' . . . the splines hold the tension . . .

    these are surfaces that move; it's 'ooh, here we go' . . . proportion, surface, and detail all convey emotion,

    and yet they are all under control . . . control, control, control -- it's the most important thing." But then hestops. It turns out that this is a bit of a strip but more of a tease, for Bangle resists baring the entire car,

    BMW's 2003 Z4 sports convertible. There will be no full-frontal display of the Z4 before it makes its

    official debut at the Paris auto show in late September. At the push of a button, the Z4 takes a slow turn ona revolving platform. "This is it!" Bangle exclaims. "An absolutely hyper-modern roadster, full of

    mega-emotion."

    Bangle is amped about the Z4 -- as well he should be. He oversaw the team that designed it. As BMW'schief of design, Bangle leads all 250 of the German carmaker's design engineers and artists, color experts,

    ergonomic specialists, materials scientists, clay modelers, and computer wizards, all of whom work in the

    FIZ and in the company's Designworks/USA subsidiary, located in southern California. Ultimately, he is thepoint man for the look and feel of every car and motorcycle that bears BMW's distinctive blue-and-white

    roundel, as well as the Mini brand and, as of next year, the ultra-luxury Rolls-Royce.

    Every model launch at every car company represents a big bet, and the Z4 is no exception: It took aminimum of $1 billion to design and engineer the coupe and ready it for production. But there's far more at

    stake here than return on investment. The Z4 is BMW's radical follow-up to the January launch of its

    redesigned flagship, the 7 Series luxury sedan, which is arguably the most controversial model that theGerman carmaker has ever put before the public. Taken together, the Z4 and the 7 are at the forefront of a

    make-or-break attempt by BMW to reinvent its entire spectrum of cars. Such a gamble arrives at a perilous

    moment in Bayerische Motoren Werke AG's 86-year history: The company is coming off of a record-breaking year. And as anyone in the car business will tell you, nothing is tougher than surpassing past

    success.

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  • Just consider this: While the U.S. auto market was down 1.3% in 2001, BMW posted a 10% sales gain inthe United States and a 12% gain worldwide. In the United States, BMW roared past Mercedes-Benz to

    become the second-best-selling premium brand behind Lexus. And it beat all automakers in

    PricewaterhouseCoopers's annual survey on shareholder return.

    At a time when many global companies are hunkering down and retrenching, BMW is moving forward,

    placing a big bet that it has a winning design for future growth. Companies typically take risks because

    there is no other option: Their backs are against the wall and there's no choice but to change. BMW ismaking bold moves at the very peak of its success. "Carmakers are running up against a very tough

    choice," observes brand analyst Will Rodgers, cofounder of SHR Perceptual Management. "Either they

    protect their market share and play not to lose, like GM and Toyota, or they go all out, place some big bets,and play to win. BMW is playing to win."

    BMW's Design for the Future

    It's just around midnight, and Bangle is lingering over a Weiss beer in a trendy Munich restaurant. He isthinking about Stephen Jay Gould, the renowned author and paleontologist who died this past May. Or

    rather, he is thinking about Gould's controversial theory known as punctuated equilibrium, which argues

    that evolution proceeds slowly, but not always steadily; it is sometimes interrupted by sudden, rapidchange. Bangle believes that cars evolve in a similar fashion. And he is convinced that BMWs are entering

    a period of abrupt, accelerated change in their own evolution.

    "When you spend an enormous amount of money developing a new model, you don't just throw all thatmoney out the window seven years later and do something completely different," he says. "Instead, you

    refine the car, you improve it, and you get your money out of it. Ultimately, you develop two generations of

    cars that are very close in their evolutionary nature. But then, 14 years later, the conditions have changedso radically -- competitive pressures, technological advances, safety and environmental regulations,

    consumer preferences -- that it's time to make the big jump."

    For BMW, it's time to make that jump. The company is resisting the lemming-like move of so manycarmakers to target every sector of the industry and pump out high volumes of product. BMW has mapped

    out a different route, attacking one end of the industry: the high end. The company's new chairman and

    CEO, Helmut Panke, explains BMW's decision to stick with what it knows best: "I cannot recall havingever seen a clear and convincing correlation between size and success. At the moment, it seems as though

    the greater the size, the greater the number of problems. Our own goal is clear: to be the leader in every

    premium segment of the international automotive industry."

    BMW's executives are gambling that a profound shift among consumer preferences will mean that in the

    next decade, the worldwide market for luxury cars could grow by as much as 50%. (BMW expects that the

    demand for mass-market cars will grow by just 25%.) "The car market seems to be bifurcating betweenmore expensive, prestige products and very inexpensive, high-volume products," says Tom Purves,

    chairman and CEO of BMW North America. "The middle ground is the killing fields -- the worst business

    to be in. You have to achieve enormous numbers to make any money at all."

    With a global recession under way and many carmakers awash in red ink, BMW has decided that now is

    the time to unleash an extraordinary product offensive on the luxury and near-luxury end. In the early

    1980s, it produced four lines of cars: the 3, 5, 6, and 7 Series. Within the next six years, it will break out 20new models and 3 new engine series, including the 1 Series, which will target young buyers; a new 6 Series,

    which will be aimed squarely at high-end Mercedes models; an X3, which will take on premium SUVs;

    variants of the Mini; and a new generation of super-luxury Rolls-Royces.

    The redesigned 7 Series is leading the charge, and it has met with plenty of return fire. Bangle's design team

    reshaped the 7's back end by raising the trunk lid and widening the opening. It also introduced a digitized

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  • system, dubbed iDrive, which enables drivers to control 270 features -- from the navigation system to thebuilt-in phone to the surround-sound stereo -- by using a mouse-like device to scroll through menus on a

    screen situated atop the dashboard. The radical look and the attempt to reimagine the human-computer

    interface in a car have shocked some critics and buyers. More than 2,000 people have signed a "Stop ChrisBangle" petition on petitiononline.com, calling on BMW to fire its design chief. (Presumably, the entry "I

    hate myself for that design!" signed by one "Chris Bangle" is a fake.)

    BMW counters that sales are running 17% ahead of those for the previous 7 Series during the same earlymonths of its life in the mid-1990s. Adrian Van Hooydonk, president of Designworks and the man who first

    sketched the new 7 and developed its styling, contends that BMW's flagship car was in danger of being

    stifled by the weight of its own history.

    "Over the years, we've been very successful in defining the BMW look, which we've done by being very

    precise in our designs," he says. "But when you make only incremental changes, you find yourself in a

    corridor that gets narrower and narrower. Finally, you reach a dead end, and by then, the customer hasabandoned you for a car that's fresh and new. We had to break through that corridor. The goal for the new

    7 was to push the boundaries as far as we could. You can't be a leader if you're not out in front."

    "One Sausage, Three Different Lengths"

    The effort to envision a new generation of BMWs began a decade ago. Soon after Bangle joined the

    company in October 1992, he participated in an upper-management workshop that attempted to look 10

    years out and pinpoint what premium-car buyers would want. They concluded that the first decade of thenew millennium -- the time we live in now -- would be a dynamic world of near-constant movement. BMW

    would have to build products that move people both physically and emotionally. It could no longer be just a

    car company. It had to be a mobility company. It had to become a company that let people motor.

    This new vision finds its purest expression in the ad copy for the Mini Cooper: "When you drive, you go

    from A to B. When you motor, you go from A to Z. . . . Nobody can tell you when you're motoring. You

    just know." The brief for Bangle and his team was straightforward: Design cars that give people themotoring spirit.

    Boyke Boyer, head of exterior design, recalls that BMW's design team was woefully unprepared for this

    new world. A rumpled man with tousled silver hair, a two-day beard, and a big laugh, Boyer is a 30-yearveteran of BMW. Sitting in his office at the FIZ, chain-smoking Marlboros, he says that at the time of

    Bangle's arrival, the design team was near the bottom of the corporate food chain. The designers had

    worked for two years without a design director; they lacked a leader to champion their cause and nurture apoint of view. As a result, the team fell under the thumb of BMW's justly famous engineering department.

    "You'd never have a voice at meetings," Boyer exclaims, waving his hands dismissively. "The attitude was,

    'Oh, those designers, pshh, pshh. They're nothing but a bunch of picture makers!' "

    Not surprisingly, BMW design stagnated. The German auto press sometimes derided its conservative

    approach as "eine Wurst, drei Gre" -- "one sausage, three different lengths" -- implying that its cars were

    cast from the same mold. "When we'd launch new models at an automobile exhibition," explains Boyer,"our colleagues from competing companies would come by and say, 'Are those all of your ideas? What do

    you do all day?' We couldn't tell them that we'd tried radical approaches but they had all been turned

    down."

    BMW won't comment on why it recruited Bangle, but it's clear that the company had to quash the practice

    of grinding out different-sized sausages. To ensure a future of successful styling at BMW, Bangle and his

    team would have to expand the palette and develop a distinct look and feel for each model. But first he hadto meet an even tougher challenge: Find a way to elevate the department to the same lofty level as the

    engineers. Design had to speak with a forceful voice throughout the 97,000-person company. Which meant

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  • that Bangle had to speak forcefully for design.

    Behold the Invisible Man

    BMW wraps everything relating to its R&D efforts in a veil of secrecy, and the selection of its new design

    chief was no exception. The October 1992 announcement that Bangle had won the prestigious position wassudden and unexpected. The auto press was incredulous. Even though he was the director of the Fiat

    Design Centre, in Turin, Italy, none of the models that bear his imprint -- notably the Coupe Fiat of 1993

    and the Alfa Romeo 145 of 1994 -- had made their debut yet. Outside of European design circles, Banglewas largely an unknown -- and an American, no less. One magazine promptly dubbed him the Invisible

    Man.

    Bangle says that he was humbled to have won the job, and no doubt he was. But his humility might in parthave been a subtle ploy to win over BMW's senior designers -- possibly a gambit to lead them by first

    letting them lead him. At the same time, Bangle had to find a way to fend off the suffocating effects of

    what he calls the "Festung [fortress] design culture" that permeated the FIZ. BMW is the antithesis of theboundless organization. Hierarchies and lines of authority are a real, even physical presence at BMW,

    especially so at its vaunted R&D center. Visitors are required to surrender their passports at the front desk;

    they must then walk through a labyrinth of corridors and electronically alarmed doors before gaining entryto the design studios. And no outsiders -- not even employees from other departments -- are allowed inside

    the center unaccompanied. When they are finally invited in, their entrance is accompanied by a loud,

    less-than-welcoming shouted greeting: "Outsiders!"

    It was Bangle's responsibility to safeguard the creative process while simultaneously building bridges to the

    rest of the organization. His first step was to push his designers to take risks -- and to be prepared to defend

    the results. "Leaders dare to take you to where you don't want to go," he exclaims. "And that's true for adesign department. People tend to work backward into their comfort zones, and they have to be prodded

    out of them."

    Bangle also set out to build what he calls a dutzen culture: an open, informal place where people aren'tafraid to say what they really think. "Chris expects people to disagree with him from time to time," explains

    Sabine Zemelka, head of material and color design. "We can all get pretty impassioned about the decision

    making, and there's a reason for it: We understand that good design comes from making the right choices."

    Then there was the matter of working effectively with the engineers. Instead of attempting to conquer

    engineering -- to bend it to a design point of view -- Bangle half-jokingly says that he tried to co-opt it. He

    made his move in 1996, when he formed a project team that was led jointly by a designer and an engineerand was composed of members from both groups. He carved out a seven-figure budget and sent the team to

    work in the United States at a secret location of its own choosing. He called the project "Deep Blue."

    The goal was to come up with a radical successor to the X5 sport-utility vehicle, which was being readiedfor production in Spartanburg, South Carolina. But there was another equally critical goal: to get engineers

    to advocate for design and to get designers to champion engineering. Deep Blue's members were cut free of

    the FIZ and allowed to relocate so that they could work far from prying eyes -- including, says Bangle, hisown eyes. The team leased Elizabeth Taylor's former home in Malibu, California. After six months of

    grueling work, it had produced six product statements for what would eventually become the X3 SUV.

    "Both the designers and the engineers learned that the key to a passionate BMW is a synthesis ofengineering passion and design passion," says Bangle. "They saw that engineers do a better job when they

    work with designers, and designers do a better job when they work with engineers. You can't teach that.

    They had to learn it for themselves."

    Rival Designs: My Colleague, My Competitor

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  • If collaboration is a crucial piece of the design process at BMW, then so too is internal competition. Just asBMW's designers compete against Mercedes-Benz and Audi, they battle each other to create a winning car.

    Bangle typically assigns as many as six teams to develop concepts for a single new BMW. The competition

    can be intense, but it all plays to BMW's advantage. While the designers work out their visions for the nextcoupe or sedan, the company leverages all of their ideas.

    "The key here is diversity. If our people all thought the same way, we wouldn't have a design culture; we'd

    just have mass opinion," explains Bangle. "That's why internal competition is a fundamental premise of thisorganization: It gives us this dynamic exchange of viewpoints. The outcome is far more powerful than what

    a single person could produce."

    It's up to Bangle to draw the best designs out of each artist and keep his teams fresh over the three-to-four-year process of evolving a new car. It's a complex challenge. Experience has shown him that the

    early front-runner often will not turn out to be the winning design. Bangle prepares for such an outcome by

    instructing another team to come up with a concept that's diametrically opposed to the front-runner'smodel. Such was the case in the competition to design the new 7 Series. While the early leader followed the

    middle road, Van Hooydonk chose to take the road less traveled. There were many setbacks along the way,

    but eventually, his unconventional design emerged as the winner.

    Bangle contends that BMW is willing to live with this high-risk strategy over the short term, in hopes of

    nailing big, long-term gains. Ultimately, the market will decide whether the 7 and the Z4 are the right cars

    for the time. Bangle's thoughts are on the future. "BMW's mandatory retirement age is 60 for seniormanagement, which means that I've got just 14 years left here," he says while exiting the FIZ. "That's two

    generations in car years -- just two shots at making an impact." And with that, he was gone. He was last

    seen heading west, head held high, driving a bold, red 7.

    Sidebar: "Take Notes on the World. There Will Be a Test."

    Where do car designers get their inspiration? It's a mystery even to the designers themselves. As they oncestood looking at the final prototype for the new 7 Series, Chris Bangle turned to Adrian Van Hooydonk, the

    7's designer, and asked, "Where did this come from?" Van Hooydonk shrugged; he really couldn't say.

    In broad terms, BMW's designers get their ideas from the world around them -- though not, they hasten toadd, from the world of cars. "If I were to list my influences in car design, I'm afraid you'd have to think

    pretty synthetically to make sense of them," says Bangle. "Architecture, airplanes, boats, botany,

    cathedrals, domes . . . just go through the alphabet."

    Bangle fills notebooks with cartoon-like sketches of his travels and observations, with quick captions

    written in German and English. There's a star chart for locating the Southern Cross; there are notes from

    last year's World Economic Forum, including a whimsical sketch of Hillary Clinton's begrimed high heelsand a free-flowing illustration of the gateway to the Alamo, in San Antonio, Texas. Tellingly, there's not a

    single sketch of a car. Bangle won't comment on his jottings (too personal), but as he closes the journal, he

    offers a cryptic bit of advice: "Take notes on the world. There will be a test."

    Ultimately, argues Bangle, a car designer is really a sculptor. "To paraphrase Michelangelo, We try to reveal

    the figure within the stone. That's what a boy does with a girl in the backseat of a car on a Saturday night --

    he's trying to reveal the figure within. And that's what a designer does when he confronts that block ofclay."

    As the model begins to take shape, the designers stand back and cast a critical eye on the process. To

    fine-tune a car's large, gestural surfaces, the designers communicate in a vernacular that they've dubbed"Banglish": a combination of German, English, Italian, onomatopoeia, and ultrademonstrative hand

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  • gestures. They spend hours debating whether there's enough "scccmt" in the lines -- that is, whether thelines need to accelerate more. Bangle is particularly concerned with the "visual energy" and tension in a

    car's surfaces, and he will use a series of plucked-string sounds ("ding-di-ding, ding ding") that rise in pitch

    to imply changes of tension in a line. "There's no single language that can express what we're trying to do,"says Boyke Boyer, who is unquestionably the king of onomatopoeia. "So we make up our own language."

    Bangle puts it another way: "The definition that semanticists use for 'design' is meaning. Where there is

    meaning, there is design."

    Bill Breen ([email protected] [1]) is a Fast Company senior editor.

    Links:

    [1] mailto:[email protected]

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